The SEVEN stories that impact your life for Tuesday the 26th of June, 2012

A small but determined group of postal workers are planning a hunger strike. The Washington Post says supporters will travel to the District to stage a four-day hunger strike to protest the Postal Service’s deteriorating finances and services and Congress’s failure to address the situation. The protesters will make their stand days before the postal service makes changes that will end overnight delivery of up to 20 percent of the country’s first-class mail, as mail-sorting hubs are shuttered.

The Office of Management and Budget wants the government to be easier to deal with. We told you yesterday about their proposal to cut down on paperwork. Now they’re asking agencies for ways to reduce their regulatory burdens. Federal Computer Week says the new memo is part of an effort todecrease regulatory trouble, officials want all agencies to attempt to identify at least one initiative, or combination of them, that would eliminate at least 50,000 hours in annual burdens.

The Thrift Savings Plan is hoping to get a boost to its budget as it prepares for the baby boomers to start retiring. Government Executive saysthe Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board anticipates managing an additional 4.4 percent in Thrift Savings Plan assets by fiscal 2017 and growing the size of its budget by 25 percent.

The government is paying crime-ridden communities to hire veterans and turn them into police officers. TheJustice Departmenthanded out more than $111 million to public safety agencies as part of its Vets-to-Cops grant program. It says the money will save or create about 800 positions. Only veterans who have served since Sept. 11, 2001, can apply. The grants are targeted toward communities with financial problems and high crime rates. Grantees include Boston, Chicago, Atlanta and Akron, Ohio.

Defense Contractor SAIC is protesting a nearly $2 billion award to Lockheed Martin Corp. by the Defense Information Systems Agency. The Washington Business Journal reports the Bethesda-based Lockheed Martin ousted SAIC for management of the Global Information Grid under a $1.9 billion contract awarded by the DISA. The award succeeds a 10-year contract, given to SAIC in 2001, that had reportedly generated more than $400 million in revenue.

TheJustice Departmenthas set up a hotline telephone number and email box for the public in the aftermath of a Supreme Court decision. Citizens can use the hotlines to report potential civil rights violations in Arizona. Federal News Radio says the court ruled that police may legally check the immigration status of people they stop for other reasons. But the court also said the law should be enforced in a way that avoids long detentions. And, that the police couldn't stop people only for the purpose of checking immigration status.

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On today’s DorobekINSIDER

When disaster strikes and you need medical attention, Dr. H. Allen Dobbs is the man to call. He revolutionized the world of disaster medicine. And for his work he has been nominated for a Service to America Medal.

Has the cybersecurity conversation morphed into a conversation about cyberwar? We’ll get insights from Robert Rodriguez from the Security Innovation Network.